Flanders v. Herbert

1 Smith & H. 205
CourtSuperior Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 15, 1808
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Smith & H. 205 (Flanders v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanders v. Herbert, 1 Smith & H. 205 (N.H. Super. Ct. 1808).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was now delivered by

Smith, C. J.

It is very clear that an officer can justify wherever he has a writ from a superior court; a court which has general jurisdiction, jurisdiction of such causes, authority to issue such writs; though the writ in that particular case be erroneous, void,1 an absolute nullity, and the court no jurisdiction in that action, or at least might be ousted of jurisdiction by plea in abatement, and had no authority to issue that writ. 8 Wilson, 845; 2 Tidd, 986 ; 6 G. Bacon, 167, 168; 2 Salk. 700.

A capias ad respondendum,, in which a Term intervenes between the teste and return, is void, an absolute nullity: 2 Salk. 700; 8 Wils. 345; and, if the sheriff suffer one arrested on such writ to escape, he is not liable to the creditor; and yet he may justify under it. The only case where an officer," having a writ, cannot justify, is that where the court issuing) the writ has no jurisdiction. There seems to be no instance where an officer cannot justify under a writ from a superior court. The cases where he is not allowed to justify are where the process issued from inferior courts in the English sense, i. e. courts of limited jurisdiction.

The reason assigned for the rule is, that an officer is obliged to obey the command of courts having general jurisdiction, and therefore is not answerable for the correctness or regularity of the process. And this is altogether reasonable, con[208]*208sidering' the character of such courts for correctness and. regularity, and the degree of knowledge we may fairly presume officers are possessed of. With respect to inferior courts, the officer must judge, at his peril, whether the court has jurisdiction.

Whether an officer could justify, under a writ issued from a justice [of the] peace, where the ad damnum exceeded four pounds, may be a question. Whether the justices of the peace come within the denomination of inferior courts within this rule may also be questioned. I am clearly of opinion that justices of the peace are not inferior courts,.in the English sense of the term, in every case. In this case, on the ground j on which I form my opinion, justices of the peace may be con-^ sidered as courts of superior jurisdiction.

I have stated the general doctrine as to justification by officers under process, and I agree to it, but do not think it decisive of the present case. .1 have no doubt that Herbert could justify, under a writ from Samuel Green; that Samuel Green had, in this ease, jurisdiction; but the question is, whether Herbert had any writ at the time he made the arrest; not whether he had a good writ, a regular precept, a writ in form of law; but whether he had that which can be denominated a writ.

A writ, an original writ, in the English sense, .is a mandatory letter from the King, in chancery, on parchment, sealed with the great seal, and directed to the sheriff of the county in which the injury is supposed to have been committed, requiring him to command the wrong-doer, or a party accused, either to do justice to the complainant, or else to appear in court and to answer the accusation against him. 8 Blackst. 278. All writs and plaints set forth the cause of complaint, some in more general, others in more particular, terms. 3 Blackst. 273, 293. A declaration is only an amplification or exposition of the original writ upon which the action was founded, with the additional circumstances of time and place when and where the injury was committed. A bare inspection of the forms proves what I have mentioned. Take any of the forms in 3 Blackst. Appendix; and I take it for granted, [209]*209if that part which describes the cause of complaint were omitted altogether, the residue would not be a writ. Apply this to the present case. I think Herbert had no writ upon English principles, because it contained no account whatever of the cause of complaint. He, Flanders, has been attached to answer the treasurer, &c„ in an action of the case, for that, whereas, to the damage of the plaintiff, so much. But I conceive the case is different when brought to the test of our law, as it must be, for this is one of the cases in which we have deviated most from English practice. We have seen that a writ, in England, is a mandatory letter from the supreme power, in which the cause of action is briefly stated, hence called a brief. There are a great number of these writs, differing one from the other. They are preserved in a book, called the Register, Ttegistrum omnium Brevium. 3 Blackst. 51, 183, 184; 4 Blackst. 427.

In this State the case is different. We have but a small number of forms, and the formal part is the same in almost all actions, and is prescribed by statute. What distinguishes one writ from another is the declaration. In England it is the statement of the cause of complaint. The writ, in New England, does not, generally speaking, give a brief account of the cause of action, leaving it to be amplified in the declaration; but it contains, and must,|by our usage, i. e. the (our) common law^contain the declaration. When we speak of a writ of attachment, we mean, not the formal part only, — for this is not a writ,

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5 Mass. 174 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1809)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Smith & H. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanders-v-herbert-nhsuperct-1808.